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Europe on the brink of collapse
Scotland Sunday ^ | 10/27/02

Posted on 11/04/2002 3:40:00 PM PST by wideawake

The Euro-zone is in a spiral of self-destruction as its crisis-hit economy heads from bad to worse

BY ITS own hand the economic life is being squeezed from Europe.

Collapsing confidence, tumbling stock markets and a sickly currency take second place to a spectacular public row between the president of the European Commission and the European Central Bank on whether the central pillar of policy is "stupid" or "indispensable for economic and monetary union".

Even by the standards of the "fudge and mudge" political culture that has long prevailed in Europe, it is hard to believe it has sunk to this.

Pork-barrel spending or utterly inflexible central bank rules: one or the other of these roaring dinosaurs will have to give. But in this epic battle it is the economic future of Europe that is giving first.

While this battle rages, the Euro-zone economy is going from bad to worse. It was hardly surprising that many missed the devastating one-word summary of the German economy by the country’s equivalent of the CBI last week: "catastrophic".

From the bottom to the top, but especially at the top, Europe is in a deepening mess. The international economic downturn has contributed to continental woes. But that downturn is not the cause, or the proximate cause, of Europe’s stunning reversal of fortune.

The cause is a self-destruction wrought by a political elite that has wrapped itself in fantastical self-delusion about the superiority of its economic system, the coming ascendancy of the single currency over the dollar, and the tide of wealth and prosperity that would inevitably flow from the relentless pursuit of "ever closer union". Here, on an epic scale, has been a procession of naked emperors who cannot begin to grasp why the world has stopped applauding.

For the Euro-zone, the applause stopped long ago. In the cacophony that passes for policy coherence there has come an absurd but utterly predictable result: far from the euro providing greater stability and a platform for better performance as its apologists claimed, the economies inside the Euro-zone are now faring worse than those outside.

This year will be the third in succession that the economies of the EU 15 have in aggregate outperformed the Euro 12. For this year and next it looks set to be the case that Britain, in GDP growth terms, is better off out. Those five economic tests behind which the government has hidden should be stripped away to show a glaring, humbling truth: if it’s economic performance you want, you’re better off out.

Nothing has more exposed the myth of the superior continental economic model than the flight of capital out of the Euro-zone and the stock market collapses this year. They have been breathtaking in their severity. At one point this month the German stock market was showing a collapse of 70% from its peak, double the percentage fall in the Dow Jones. The full consequences of the destruction of savings on such a scale and at such a pace have only just begun to make themselves felt.

Barely a week now passes without another red pencil taken to forecasts for economic growth in the Euro-zone. Last Friday, it was the turn of the National Institute for Economic & Social Research. As if 1.4% growth last year was not slow enough, it now forecasts that the Euro-zone will only manage growth of 0.9% this year and 2.1% next.

As for Germany, which accounts for about a third of output in the zone, GDP will rise by only 0.4% this year, and by 1.7% next, a shadow of the subdued growth in America - the economy that Europe so despises. On Monday, the keenly awaited Ifo index of business confidence is set to show a further fall for the fifth month running. On top of slowing demand, German business now has to contend with a coalition that has proffered yet more of the disease as the cure: yet more tax.

It is not the world slowdown that has caused this performance collapse, but the interaction of entirely self-inflicted wounds: over-regulated labour markets, a relentless rise in the government share of the economy, a growing tax burden, regulation out of every orifice and a desperate rearguard action against all and every attempt to dismantle state aid and subsidies. The same clique that greeted the bursting of America’s new economy bubble as proof of the flawed Anglo-Saxon model is the same one that, now their own economy has fallen into a far deeper slowdown than that in the US, turns to blaming US policymakers for not doing enough to pull the rest of the world including the EU out of the mire. To listen to Europe’s political elite is to hear the pathetic cry of the bankrupt that someone else spent all the money. As for Germany, the powerhouse of the 1950s and 1960s has long given way to lethargy and laziness. Reds and Greens attack what is left of a once proud enterprise culture. They declaim their country in the Bundesrat like latter-day Tom Paines. But truly, it is they who pity the plumage and forget the dying bird.

Despite all this it has long been the belief of EU apologists in Britain that if only we engaged "at the centre of Europe" we would "win the argument" and slow the drive to ever closer union and ever greater centralism. But this is to ignore the fact that there are large sections of opinion in continental Europe that do not share the political and economic attitudes of the Anglo Saxon world one iota. Indeed, not even in the disintegration of the Growth and Stability Pact is there much cause for British reformists to cheer. It was Prodi no less, who repeated his call last week for "a single economic government for all countries that share the same money", with more power to the Commission to enforce a Stability Pact duly doctored to his liking.

This call was echoed by members of the EU’s latest triumph of hope over experience, the Convention on the Future of Europe, whose economic committee called for the introduction of qualified majority voting on tax harmonisation and for strengthened economic co-ordination between the member states.

As the economist Stephen Lewis eloquently argues: "In the circumstances it is questionable whether UK ambitions in the EU are realistic."

In any event, there is no guarantee, he adds, that what emerges from the current crippling stand-off between Prodi and a European Central Bank that seems bent on holding out against interest rate cuts until the incipient recession has turned into the full-blown type, will be a substantial improvement.

It is the basic principles on which this monetary union rests that are deeply flawed. No amount of dissemblage about five economic tests makes up for the failure to recognise and attack the profound structural and conceptual flaws that lie behind this currency union and the crisis that has developed within it, one not of performance merely, but of survival. Here was a construct that was never an end in itself but an instrument intended to drive ahead towards "ever closer union" and it is that drive, and the Bonapartian vanity behind it, that is leading Europe to ruin.

Some take comfort this weekend from the news that Peter Hain, the government’s "Mr Europe" has been moved to the Welsh Office. But the balance of influence in the Cabinet has moved if anything in favour of the pro-Euro camp. If that is good news, at least one does not need to look too far to see what bad news is like.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: economy; euro; europe
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
I disagree - the Europeans are us, but the US has siphoned off a significant proportion of the Europeans who had an entrepreneurial spirit.

Whenever I go to Europe, I'm always fascinated by how akin I feel to them and how distant, simultaneously.

We will either quickly combust or be gloriously reborn, our culture is too fast-paced to replicate Europe's modulated decline.

41 posted on 11/04/2002 5:01:18 PM PST by wideawake
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To: wideawake
sickly currency

"Sickly currency"? Are they kidding? The Euro is about to smash through parity with the dollar again, and I have made a fortune buying Euro futures this year.

42 posted on 11/04/2002 5:02:55 PM PST by montag813
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To: montag813
The euro was never supposed to descend to parity with the dollar in the first place.

The fact that it trades in the dollar's range is an embarrassment to the Eurocrats who had originally projected a $1.25 euro by now.

43 posted on 11/04/2002 5:05:36 PM PST by wideawake
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To: wideawake
That's precisely the kind of thinking which always bothers me whenever I hear conservatives ranting and raving about the "evil Europeans". Yes, we have a more free market oriented culture. We are also more materialistic, more crass, and more culturally deprived. As many have remarked, America is the only country to go from barbarism to decadence without an intervening period of civilization. As I said earlier, there is more than one way of going down the toilet. Europe is taking its route there, and we are taking ours. This doesn't give us any reason to gloat.
44 posted on 11/04/2002 5:05:47 PM PST by Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
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To: wideawake
When are we going to press for all the EU states votes to be consolidated into merely one solitary UN vote like our 50 states have?
45 posted on 11/04/2002 5:06:51 PM PST by michigander
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
Isn't it amazing, with the future of Western Civilization in grave danger, that on an ostensibly conservative message board, we actually have people gloating about misforunes in Europe?
46 posted on 11/04/2002 5:10:50 PM PST by Phillip Augustus
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
I have to agree with you on that one. We are regulating all industry out of America, including resource dependent industries like mining, farming, fishing and forestry.Manufacturing jobs? Fegeddaboutit. We are flooding job markets with illegal or third world workers who drive wages down, through taxes we encourage business to locate in foreign countries, we cannot educate our children well enough to read themselves out of a paper bag, and we are forcing property ownership out of existance by using easements and non-conforming property rules to phase people out of single family residential properties. So the only place people will have to live is in high density high rise apartments. Sounds like Europe and their "think small" attitudes.
47 posted on 11/04/2002 5:13:01 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
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To: aculeus
Month-long vacations, fully paid government health care, unemployment in double digits (no limit on unemployment pay). etc., etc. These idiots think they can ignore arithmetic.

Leftists have no understanding of human nature and they lack comon sense. This will be their undoing.

48 posted on 11/04/2002 5:14:40 PM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham
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To: Phillip Augustus
Isn't it amazing, with the future of Western Civilization in grave danger,...

You'll excuse me if I don't share your pessimism.

49 posted on 11/04/2002 5:18:56 PM PST by michigander
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
There's quite a bit of talk about how culturally deprived we Americans are.

I honestly don't see it.

When you look at French or German bestseller lists, self-help books and books on football and cuisine are perennial winners. Not much different from Americans.

Martin Amis is no greater a novelist than Updike. Amelie is no more impressive a cinematic achievement than Moonstruck. An empty room with one flickering track light is no more profound than the Photorealist school.

The Europeans are no longer great generators of cultural artifacts - they are connoisseurs of their own and others'.

Their plastic arts and literature have been as degraded by postmodernity as America's.

50 posted on 11/04/2002 5:19:18 PM PST by wideawake
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To: michigander
I urge you to read Patrick J. Buchanan's "The Death of The West"- this explains my pessimism.
51 posted on 11/04/2002 5:22:39 PM PST by Phillip Augustus
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To: Phillip Augustus
Then you'll excuse me for not sharing Mr. Buchanan's pessimism.
52 posted on 11/04/2002 5:27:20 PM PST by michigander
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To: wideawake
This year will be the third in succession that the economies of the EU 15 have in aggregate outperformed the Euro 12.

Can somebody explain to me the difference between the EU 15 and the EU 12?

53 posted on 11/04/2002 5:27:58 PM PST by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76
I think the author uses EU for eastern Europe and Euro to designate the European Union.
54 posted on 11/04/2002 5:33:12 PM PST by CharacterCounts
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To: wideawake
Bye, bye, Miss European Pie, drove your Fiats to tax levies but the levies were dry; them good ol' Frogs drinking wine with their lies, singin': 'This will be the day that we lie; this will be the day that we lie.

Helter Skelter in Belgium's swelter, hacks flew off with a tax shelter, eight miles high and fallin' ... fast.

(but you know the rest)

55 posted on 11/04/2002 5:38:19 PM PST by Bounceback
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To: Pushi
How can the US capitalize on this and make their situation worse and not hurt us?

We can capitalize on this situation by learning from it. This writer in Scottland understands that it is not in his nation's interest to surrender their national sovereignity to the European Union because decisions damaging to the UK's interest will be made by the EU. We should learn that similarly surrendering our sovereignty to the World Trade Organization is not in our interest for the same reason. That's how we can capitalize. Instead, we gloat and cheer Europe's problems and we ridicule people like Buchanan who speak the truth on this WTO issue.

56 posted on 11/04/2002 5:47:59 PM PST by Red Jones
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To: SamAdams76
Three EU countries do not use the euro as their currency: the UK, Denmark and Sweden.
57 posted on 11/04/2002 5:51:36 PM PST by wideawake
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To: SamAdams76
Sorry - to clarify:

EU countries: Ireland, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Italy, Finland, Sweden, Denmark and the UK.

The last three do not use the euro as their currency, but participate in the union. So the 12 who do use the euro are called the euro 12 as opposed to the EU 15.

58 posted on 11/04/2002 5:55:39 PM PST by wideawake
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To: michigander
Then you'll excuse me for not sharing Mr. Buchanan's pessimism.

but who will excuse you for being ignorant? ... ... if you won't read Buchanan's book, but instead dismiss it like that, what can a person think?

59 posted on 11/04/2002 5:57:50 PM PST by Red Jones
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To: wideawake
Thanks for the clarification. But now this statement in the article makes even less sense to me:

This year will be the third in succession that the economies of the EU 15 have in aggregate outperformed the Euro 12.

So if the EU 15 is the Euro 12 with the addition of Sweden, Denmark and the UK, then won't the EU 15 always outperform the Euro 12? Or maybe they are talking about the fact that the three countries that haven't yet adopted the Euro are outperfoming the 12 countries that have.

60 posted on 11/04/2002 6:07:35 PM PST by SamAdams76
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